Category: Cultural
Size: Large
Condition: Excellent
Inhabitants: At least 4-5 eerily committed volunteers
Description
The Leicah Community Art Gallery is run by the Haytham Public Library and serves as a community center for the arts. It hosts amateur art exhibitions, student galleries and all types of art classes from painting to ceramics and basket weaving. The gallery typically hosts local artists for up to a month at a time, rotating between 3 main gallery spaces. The fourth gallery is used as a classroom for group lessons while the attic is used for individual lessons. In mid-December and mid-June the gallery is cleared out to make room for the bi-annual Elementary School showcases. These and other school events are some of the most popular events of the year, turning into huge community-wide potlucks celebrating the arts. While it is run by the library, the gallery receives no state or city funding and is entirely dependent on public donations. Despite this, the gallery is in excellent condition and maintains the largest public assortment of art equipment- such as pottery wheels, woodworking studios, a green screen room and even a glass-blowing furnace.
[The Kulza Family takes great pride in this gallery, preferring it to the stuffy Downtown galleries. They are always quick to offer donations and replace any broken equipment.]
Category: Cultural
Size: Large
Condition: Excellent
Inhabitants: At least 4-5 eerily committed volunteers
Description
The Leicah Community Art Gallery is run by the Haytham Public Library and serves as a community center for the arts. It hosts amateur art exhibitions, student galleries and all types of art classes from painting to ceramics and basket weaving. The gallery typically hosts local artists for up to a month at a time, rotating between 3 main gallery spaces. The fourth gallery is used as a classroom for group lessons while the attic is used for individual lessons. In mid-December and mid-June the gallery is cleared out to make room for the bi-annual Elementary School showcases. These and other school events are some of the most popular events of the year, turning into huge community-wide potlucks celebrating the arts. While it is run by the library, the gallery receives no state or city funding and is entirely dependent on public donations. Despite this, the gallery is in excellent condition and maintains the largest public assortment of art equipment- such as pottery wheels, woodworking studios, a green screen room and even a glass-blowing furnace.
[The Kulza Family takes great pride in this gallery, preferring it to the stuffy Downtown galleries. They are always quick to offer donations and replace any broken equipment.]